2. Cree Sunrise Song is beautiful. I’m no music theorists, but it’s interesting that Cree music seems to have the same musical scale as modern (European/American etc) music does. Was this song composed before the Cree were exposed to Europeans? Is there some inherent compelling drive that makes all humans come to the same tonal scale? I think some eastern music is different, but didn’t the native Americans come here from the Far East, across the Bering Sea land bridge? Can anyone enlighten us?
3. The novel The Body Farm by Patricia Cornwell features a fictional (?) body farm in Tennessee run by the FBI. I love her novels: all kinds of cool medical examiner stuff. Great suspense, and you can learn useful skills like how to interpret blood splatters on a wall. I think I recommended this series to Marg long ago, but it wasn’t gory enough for her.
Blog comments:
1. A manikin with a tramp stamp? Whoda thought?
2. Cree Sunrise Song is beautiful. I’m no music theorists, but it’s interesting that Cree music seems to have the same musical scale as modern (European/American etc) music does. Was this song composed before the Cree were exposed to Europeans? Is there some inherent compelling drive that makes all humans come to the same tonal scale? I think some eastern music is different, but didn’t the native Americans come here from the Far East, across the Bering Sea land bridge? Can anyone enlighten us?
3. The novel The Body Farm by Patricia Cornwell features a fictional (?) body farm in Tennessee run by the FBI. I love her novels: all kinds of cool medical examiner stuff. Great suspense, and you can learn useful skills like how to interpret blood splatters on a wall. I think I recommended this series to Marg long ago, but it wasn’t gory enough for her.